Contribution to the Physicochemical and Microbiological Study of Dried Mango. Comparison of Two Drying Methods (Oven and Solar Drying)

Authors

  • Izaora Mwamba Department of Chemistry and Industry, University of Kinshasa, Faculty of Sciences, Biochemistry and Food Chemistry Unit. BP 190 KinXI, Kinshasa, DR Congo.
  • Jean-Noel Mputu Department of Chemistry and Industry, University of Kinshasa, Faculty of Sciences, Biochemistry and Food Chemistry Unit. BP 190 KinXI, Kinshasa, DR Congo and  Department of Geology, Faculty of Engineering, University of Mons, 9 Houdain Street, 7000 Mons, Belgium.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/costr/v1/16879D

Keywords:

Mango, oven, solar dryer, vitamins, proteins, minerals

Abstract

Drying is one of the oldest methods of preservation processes available to the mankind. On that, we can track since prehistoric times. Food market dried foods play an important role in the food supply chain. As for fruits and vegetables it can be estimated that they constitute about 1% of the total drying in the food industry, by large being the grains the most important. The main feature of this process consists on lowering the water content in order to avoid or slow down food spoilage by microorganism. At this point some understanding can arise derived from the vocabulary employed; common words found are (drying) or (dehydration). A variety of mangoes were dried using two methods (solar and oven). The drying yield for sun-dried mango is 33%, compared to 26% for oven-dried mango; the relative humidity for sun-dried mango is 14.17% ± 0.01 versus 8.25% ± 0.01 for oven-dried mango. When compared to oven-dried mango, a reduction in dry matter is seen. The mango that has been dried in the sun contains a lot of vitamin B6, vitamin C, and minerals (Ca, Mg and Fe). But following the drying procedures, we also noticed the presence of vitamins (A, D, and E). We achieved results that adhered to the ISO 4833 standard, which controls the microbiology of the food chain, with regard to the microbiological criteria.

Published

2022-08-05

How to Cite

Izaora Mwamba, & Jean-Noel Mputu. (2022). Contribution to the Physicochemical and Microbiological Study of Dried Mango. Comparison of Two Drying Methods (Oven and Solar Drying). Current Overview on Science and Technology Research Vol. 1, 93–102. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/costr/v1/16879D